| Literature DB >> 33275638 |
Marit Mjørud1,2, Geir Selbæk1,2,3, Espen Bjertness4, Trine Holt Edwin1,2,5, Knut Engedal1,2, Anne-Brita Knapskog2, Bjørn Heine Strand1,2,6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To estimate transition times from dementia diagnosis to nursing-home (NH) admission or death and to examine whether sex, education, marital status, level of cognitive impairment and dementia aetiology are associated with transition times.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33275638 PMCID: PMC7717539 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0243513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Illness-death model for nursing-home admission.
Each transition is a survival model, and the stage the person is in impacts the probability of where to go next.
Background table.
Number of participants at baseline, and the number of these admitted to nursing homes and/or deceased during follow-up, by covariates.
| Number of participants at baseline (home-dwellers) | Number who entered NHs during follow-up | Number of deceased during follow-up | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 2938 | 992 | 1556 |
| Sex | |||
| Women | 1679 | 656 | 830 |
| Men | 1259 | 336 | 726 |
| Age | |||
| <65 | 297 | 80 | 101 |
| 65–69 | 337 | 98 | 131 |
| 70–74 | 503 | 145 | 241 |
| 75–79 | 683 | 209 | 351 |
| 80–84 | 658 | 264 | 401 |
| 85+ | 460 | 196 | 331 |
| Marital status (#missing values:108) | |||
| Cohabitant | 1622 | 432 | 847 |
| Living alone | 1208 | 529 | 652 |
| Education (#missing values:236) | |||
| Low (<10 years) | 1177 | 389 | 655 |
| Middle (10–12 years) | 759 | 262 | 377 |
| High (13+ years) | 766 | 250 | 377 |
| Baseline MMSE (#missing values:47) | |||
| <19 | 755 | 267 | 464 |
| 19–23 | 1235 | 461 | 653 |
| 24–30 | 901 | 249 | 416 |
| Aetiology | |||
| AD | 1549 | 501 | 732 |
| VaD | 269 | 75 | 167 |
| Mixed AD/VaD | 433 | 169 | 258 |
| DLB/PDD | 227 | 71 | 146 |
| Other dementias | 460 | 176 | 253 |
MMSE: Mini mental state examination, AD: Alzheimer’s dementia, VaD: Vascular dementia, DLB: Dementia Lewy Body, PDD: Parkinson disease dementia.
Fig 2Probability of being either a home-dweller, nursing-home resident or deceased during a 10-year follow-up after dementia diagnosis.
Unadjusted analysis, N = 2938. The shaded area is a 95% confidence interval.
Covariate difference in probability percentage points (95% confidence interval, CI) for being at one of the three stages, 4 years after dementia diagnosis.
| Model 1. Unadjusted, N = 2589 | Model 2. Fully adjusted for all included covariates in table, N = 2589 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Home-dweller | Nursing home | Deceased | Home-dweller | Nursing home | Deceased | |
| Constant (Ref) | 40 | 15 | 46 | |||
| sex | ||||||
| Women | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Men | 0 (-4, 4) | -9 (-12, -6) | 9 (5, 13) | -11 (-15, -7) | -7 (-10, -3) | 18 (13, 22) |
| Age (years) | ||||||
| <65 | 30 (25, 36) | -5 (-10, -1) | -25 (-29, -21) | 29 (23, 35) | -3 (-6, 1) | -26 (-32, -20) |
| 65–69 | 24 (19, 29) | -1 (-6, 4) | -23 (-28, -18) | 22 (17, 28) | 2 (-2, 6) | -25 (-30, -19) |
| 70–74 | 17 (12, 21) | -5 (-8, -1) | -12 (-16, -8) | 14 (9, 19) | -2 (-5, 2) | -12 (-17, -6) |
| 75+ | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Marital status | ||||||
| Cohabitant | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Living alone | -14 (-18, -10) | 11 (8, 14) | 3 (0, 6) | -10 (-15, -6) | 9 (6, 13) | 1 (-3, 6) |
| Education (years) | ||||||
| Low (≤9) | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| Middle (10–12) | 5 (0, 9) | 0 (-2, 3) | -6 (-9, -3) | -1 (-6, 3) | 4 (1, 7) | -2 (-7, 2) |
| High (13+) | 8 (3, 12) | -1 (-3, 2) | -7 (-10, -4) | -2 (-7, 3) | 4 (0, 7) | -2 (-6, 3) |
| MMSE | ||||||
| <19 | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| 19–23 | 11 (6, 16) | 0 (-3, 3) | -11 (-15, -7) | 12 (8, 17) | 1 (-2, 4) | -13 (-17, -9) |
| 24–30 | 21 (16, 26) | -6 (-9, -3) | -15 (-19, -12) | 20 (15, 25) | -3 (-6, 0) | -17 (-21, -13) |
* Probability for the combination of reference values: women, age 75+ years, cohabitant, less education (<10 years), MMSE <19. MMSE: mini mental state examination.
Probability of being either a home-dweller, nursing home resident, or deceased four years after the dementia diagnosis, by sex and marital status, adjusted by age (centred at mean age 75 years), N = 2830.
| Probability, % (95% confidence interval) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Time elapsed since diagnosis | Home-dweller | Nursing home | Deceased |
| Men | |||
| Living alone | 37 (32, 43) | 24 (20, 29) | 38 (34, 43) |
| Cohabitant | 54 (51, 57) | 11 (10, 13) | 35 (32, 38) |
| | |||
| Women | |||
| Living alone | 50 (47, 53) | 26 (23, 29) | 24 (21, 27) |
| Cohabitant | 55 (52, 59) | 20 (17, 23) | 25 (22, 27) |
| | |||
*In some cases, numbers do not add up due to rounding.
Diagnosis difference in probability (95% confidence interval, CI) for being at the three stages 4.0 years after dementia diagnosis, adjusted by age, sex, MMSE, education.
| Probability, % (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Home-dweller | Nursing home | Deceased | |
| Constant (Ref) | 48 | 22 | 30 |
| Diagnosis | |||
| AD | Ref | Ref | Ref |
| VaD | -13 (-19, -6) | -2 (-7, 3) | 15 (9, 21) |
| Mixed | -6 (-11, -1) | 2 (-2, 6) | 4 (-0, 9) |
| DLB/PDD | -17 (-23, -10) | -2 (-7, 4) | 18 (11, 25) |
| Other | -10 (-15, -5) | 5 (0, 9) | 5 (1, 10) |
*Predicted at age 75 years, for women, MMSE<19, less education (<10 years). MMSE: mini mental state examination, AD: Alzheimer’s dementia, VaD: vascular dementia, DLB: Dementia Lewy Body, PDD: Parkinson disease dementia.
Fig 3Survival in nursing home by sex.
N = 992, estimated in flexible parametric models.